Did you
Believe it? Israel "withdrew" from Bethlehem for Christmas?
From Bethlehem to Rafah - Christmas 2002
by Kristen Ess in Occupied Palestine
December 30,
2002
At the last minute, at the end of the day before Christmas Eve, the Israeli
government announced it would lift its curfew of Bethlehem. This was another
move in the endless game of Israeli propaganda, and one that was expected.
Thousands of eyes were on
Bethlehem, the West Bank city that has been under curfew and reinvasion for the
past
month. For the second year in a row the Israeli government did not allow
President Arafat to move the 13 miles from Ramallah to Bethlehem.
There is a chair
inside the Church of Nativity with a photo of Arafat and a kafia sitting on it.
The entire West Bank remains under curfew and reinvasion. The Israeli military
did not leave Bethlehem, just remained out of site of the cameras. They
occupied five high buildings throughout the Bethlehem area, using them as
watchtowers and sniper posts. Israeli military jeeps drove through the streets
and around the camps. The night before Christmas Eve, Israeli soldiers took 8
Palestinians from their homes and dumped them in Israeli detention for
interrogation. The next night it was seven. On Christmas night Israeli soldiers
abducted ten Palestinians. The Israeli military government is holding over 8,000
Palestinians hostage in its prisons.
Today, the day after Christmas, the Israeli military took over Manger Square
again. They began shooting and firing gas. They were yelling from their jeep
loudspeakers that curfew was reimposed. Some of Bethlehem's residents resisted
by throwing stones for two hours.
Last week in Bethlehem's Azzeh refugee camp, 50 Israeli soldiers stormed into a
sleeping household, one that has welcomed me as their sister and daughter for
the past year. One of the son's, living on the second of three floors, went to
his door. He called out, "I'm
unarmed, I'm opening the door now." He's telling me this, everyone in the family
has told me the way it went for them, saying, "I didn't know, you know,
they could have shot me right then. We don't ever know if they're gonna kill all
of us." The Israeli soldiers ran
into the house and demanded that everyone come outside. They put their guns in
the backs of the family and pushed at those who live on the upper floors. They
searched the blankets that the babies were wrapped in. One of the women is
pregnant. One son has a mental disability. The mother and father are elderly.
The entire family was forced to stand in the camp alleyway with their hands on
the cement wall. It was 2 o'clock in the morning, a winter night.
The Israelis
took one of the sons.
He wears glasses, writes poems, laughs out loud, makes good coffee, listens to
music. He's a student. Israeli soldiers blindfolded him and bound his hands.
They stuffed him in the back of a jeep. The kids were calling out goodbye. He is
in an Israeli prison now,
without charge. The father and all of the sons in the family, save for two, have
been abducted in this way.
His mother is sobbing throughout all of this. It's enough.
A soft-spoken man who used to live in Rafah in the south of the Gaza Strip until
the Israeli military demolished his Block O house in order to build their
separation wall, tells me, "You know really," he pauses for a long time,
"I'm afraid now that we are
just all wanted." The night before Christmas Eve the Israeli military demolished
thirty houses in Rafah.
Tanks fired into the houses, the families ran out, and the bulldozers ripped
through. There was not even a half second of notice.
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